Contents.
xlvii. Leechdoms and drinks and salves for "dry diseases"[1] of many a kind, the best ones for "dry" worm on the feet. Twelve in all against "dry" diseases.
xlviii. Leechdoms for the worms which vex men inwardly, and against worms which be in the inwards of children, and childrens inwards sore. In all twelve receipts against them.
xlix. A leechdom, single, separately, against the small worm.
l. Leechdoms again hand worms and dew worms, and if a worm eat the head; a wax salve against the hand worm. Six receipts; four sorts in all.
li. Leechdoms against worms which eat mans flesh.
lii. Two leechdoms against lice.
liii. Two leechdoms against penetrating worms.
liv. Leechdoms for a worm eaten body and a mortified.
lv. A leechdom. for a stricken body.
lvi. Leechdoms for a paralyzed body, and a bath salve.
lvii. Leechdoms and drinks and salves against the disease called "fig."
lviii. Leechdoms for a wen salve and for wen boils.
lix. Leechdoms for paralysis, that is in English, lyft addle, and for "neurisn."[2] Three.
lx. Leechdom for a burn; and salves. Eight in all.
lxi. Leechdoms for a pain in the joints, and for the lubricating secretion at the joints, called synovia, and if the synovia leak and the joint oil run out. Of all (these) receipts fourteen.
lxii. Leechdoms for fever, to heal it; drinks for that; against a tertain fever, and a quartan fever, and a quotidian fever; and against lent disease, that is (typhus) fever, and how against the disorder a man